BIOS

Some moms hope placenta pills can ward off baby blues

For most women, the placenta is something that is quickly disposed of after birth. But for others, it's a nutritious organ they're choosing to consume in the form of pills.

One of those mothers is Safire Naranjo. She had expected to suffer mood swings and fatigue after delivering her baby six weeks ago; instead, she says he's been happy and energetic. She believes much of the credit goes to capsules she had created just for her using dried parts of her own placenta.

Naranjo feels strongly that the nutrients in the organ that once supplied blood and nourishment to her baby are the reason why she hasn't slipped into postpartum depression.

"It was a shocking difference between the day I didn't take the pill and the day I did take the pill," she tells CTV News. "As soon as I started taking them, I slept better, I felt less anxious. I felt in a better mood," she says.

The idea of making use of the placenta is not new. Some cultures make a ritual of burying the placenta, and the mothers of many other mammals lick off their newborn's afterbirth and then eat the placenta.

To let the placenta go to waste seems a shame to Naranjo.

"It is an amazing organ that you grow only when you are growing a baby, and it is special and an important medicine," she says.

Because the placenta produces estrogen and progesterone, some believe that ingesting it can help to restore levels of the pregnancy hormones that plummet after delivery.

Few studies have ever examined whether there are any health benefits of human "placentophagy," as the practice of eating the placenta is called. Nevertheless, a number of mothers are interested in trying it.

But not all are comfortable with the idea of eating it "fresh." That's where dried placenta capsules come in.

Rean Cross is one of a number of women who will process placentas into edible pills. The birth coach and postpartum doula believes the pills are highly nutritious.